Wolfgang Ketterle
Associate Director, Research Laboratory of Electronics
John D. MacArthur Professor of Physics, Physics (Department of)
77 Massachusetts Avenue
Room 26-243
Cambridge, MA 02139
ketterle@mit.edu
617.253.6815
Administrative Assistant
Joanna Welch
Room 26-237
617.253.6830
j_k@mit.edu
Professor Wolfgang Ketterle is an Associate Director of the Research Laboratory of Electronics (RLE) at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), and Director of RLE’s affiliated Center for Ultracold Atoms (CUA). He has been the John D. MacArthur professor of physics at MIT since 1998. He leads a group in RLE exploring the properties of ultracold gases. His research is in the field of atomic physics and laser spectroscopy and includes laser cooling and trapping, atom optics and atom interferometry, and studies of Bose-Einstein condensation and Fermi degeneracy. A major focus is the exploration of new forms of matter, in particular novel aspects of superfluidity, coherence, and correlations in many-body systems. His observation of Bose-Einstein condensation in a gas in 1995 and the first realization of an atom laser in 1997 were recognized with the Nobel Prize in Physics in 2001 (together with E.A. Cornell and C.E. Wieman).
Professor Ketterle received a diploma (equivalent to master’s degree) from the Technical University of Munich (1982), the Ph.D. in physics from the University of Munich (1986). He did postdoctoral work at the Max-Planck Institute for Quantum Optics in Garching and at the University of Heidelberg in molecular spectroscopy and combustion diagnostics. In 1990, he came to MIT as a postdoc and joined the physics faculty in 1993.
His honors include the Rabi Prize of the American Physical Society (1997), the Gustav-Hertz Prize of the German Physical Society (1997), the Fritz London Prize in Low Temperature Physics (1999), the Dannie-Heineman Prize of the Academy of Sciences, Göttingen, Germany (1999), the Benjamin Franklin Medal in Physics (2000), the Knight Commander’s Cross (Badge and Star) of the Order of Merit of the Federal Republic of Germany (2002), the MIT Killian Award (2004), and memberships in several Academies of Sciences.
Keywords
atomic physics, ultracold atoms, Bose-Einstein condensation, atom laser, atom optics, fermionic gases, superradiance, coherent collisions, superfluidity
Related News Links
05.03.2024
Physicists arrange atoms in extremely close proximity
02.02.2023
Physicists observe rare resonance in molecules for the first time
12.16.2020
Ultracold atoms reveal a new type of quantum magnetic behavior
08.31.2020
MIT partners with national labs on two new National Quantum Information Science Research Centers
04.15.2020
New “refrigerator” super-cools molecules to nanokelvin temperatures
05.17.2019
The kilo is dead. Long live the kilo!
08.31.2015
Wolfgang Ketterle, recipient of 2015 Teaching Prize
08.10.2015
A new look at superfluidity
10.20.2014
Several RLE researchers cited as “World’s Most Influential Scientific Minds: 2014”
Related News Articles
02.15.2019
New center boosts quantum engineering
01.12.2017
Associate Directors in RLE, Wolfgang Ketterle, Polina Anikeeva, and William Oliver
04.20.2006
Wolfgang Ketterle and Rajeev J. Ram to be appointed Associate Directors of RLE